Fighting preventing aid delivery in South Sudan: UN

May 2, 2014 (JUBA) – The UN refugee agency (UNHCR) and World Food Program (WFP) are calling on South Sudan’s warring parties to provide safe access to enable humanitarian assistance to reach vulnerable people, including 125,000 Sudanese refugees in Upper Nile state’s Maban county, officials said.

Civilians fleeing violence seek refuge at a UN camp in Bor, the capital of South Sudan’s Jonglei state (AP)

There is still time to deliver stocks of food by road, with massive economies of scale, if safe access is guaranteed. Without access by road, costly air operations will become the only recourse for providing urgently needed humanitarian assistance.

Resupplying refugee camps in Maban county has been complicated by continued insecurity and fighting along supply routes, preventing WFP from conducting regular delivery of critical food supplies to refugees. As a result, the agency and its partners were forced to distribute reduced rations in March and April to refugees who depend largely on this food assistance for their survival.

Refugees are resorting to negative coping mechanisms like selling off non-food items, and burning wood meant for building latrines to produce charcoal for sale. At the same, time there are disturbing reports that at least 200 refugees have returned to war-torn Blue Nile State in North Sudan in search of food and other basic supplies.

“This could be the beginning of a worrying trend which we are powerless to prevent if the provision of food and other critical supplies continues to be erratic and inconsistent,” says Cosmas Chanda, UNHCR representative in South Sudan.

“Roads to Maban are facing imminent closure for the duration of the rainy season, which has already started,” he added while underscoring the urgency of pre-positioning adequate food supplies for the coming six months.

UNHCR said it was deeply concerned that increasing malnutrition rates among refugee children in all four camps are approaching the emergency threshold of 15%.

ACUTE MALNUTRITION

There are indications, for instance, that acute malnutrition rates have soared in February and March in Doro camp alone.

WFP said it will this week distribute the last remaining food stocks in Maban county to refugees in the camps. These food rations, it stressed, will last the refugees less than a week, with WFP to fly in additional food stocks to the camps within the next five days. More than 2,300 metric tonnes of food is needed each month to assist the Sudanese refugees and vulnerable host communities in Maban county.

“We have food supplies that could reach the refugee camps within days by road, but ongoing fighting along key supply routes is preventing us from delivering sufficient stocks into Maban county to assist refugees,” said Mike Sackett, WFP’s country director in South Sudan.

“We are prioritising available planes and helicopters to deliver food to refugees and South Sudanese populations affected by the crisis. Ultimately, regaining road access to Maban county and to other communities isolated by conflict is critical to averting a humanitarian catastrophe in South Sudan,” he added.

Due to the intensity of the conflict, humanitarian organisations have reportedly faced severe challenges in accessing many parts of the country by road and river.

“Insecurity and fighting have been key obstacles, but even in areas where there has not been active conflict, commercial transporters hired by agencies have at times faced banditry and other attacks, excessive checkpoints and demands for bribes,” the agencies said in a joint statement.

WFP said it was using a combination of airlifts and airdrops in remote, hard to reach areas, in a bid to overcome challenges such as looting and continued insecurity.

Over a million people have been displaced and thousands killed since violence broke out in South Sudan in December last year, severely affecting three of its 10 states.

(ST)

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